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msoe.dll 600 2900 2869
"Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#2
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Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE.
This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#3
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Automatic Updates /should/ have downloaded the Cumulative Updates for OE
that he's missing. @Bob: Install *all* critical updates offerd by Windows Update, then make certain Automatic Updates is enabled and working properly (see its status as reported by Security Center). How to configure and use Automatic Updates in WinXP: http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=306525 How to schedule automatic updates in WinXP, Win2K and Win2K03 http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=327838 -- ~PA Bear Bruce Hagen wrote: Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#4
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![]() I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#5
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Thanks again to all of you. This has been very helpful.
"Gary Walker" wrote: I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#6
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Your message headers show a fully patched version of OE in XP/SP2:
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.3028 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.3028 If you were missing the last OE patch out, your headers would be: X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.2905 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.2905 So, ii you post using MSNews, we can usually tell. The update was available prior to being offered at Windows Updates, but anyone that didn't get it has it now if they are fully patched. As fat as emptying the RB, I have never used that procedure, so I can't say. I use CCleaner. CCleaner: http://www.ccleaner.com/ -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Gary Walker" wrote in message t... I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#7
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![]() Thanks again, for more information. Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Your message headers show a fully patched version of OE in XP/SP2: X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.3028 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.3028 If you were missing the last OE patch out, your headers would be: X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.2905 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.2905 So, ii you post using MSNews, we can usually tell. The update was available prior to being offered at Windows Updates, but anyone that didn't get it has it now if they are fully patched. As fat as emptying the RB, I have never used that procedure, so I can't say. I use CCleaner. CCleaner: http://www.ccleaner.com/ -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Gary Walker" wrote in message t... I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
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![]()
Installing MS06-076 (KB923964) would not have affected the behavior of Disk
Cleanup, Gary. -- ~Robear Dyer (PA Bear) MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User) AumHa VSOP & Admin; DTS-L.org Gary Walker wrote: I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
#9
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![]() Perhaps not, but that's when cleanup quit including the RB. It should be easy enough to simulate, give it a try. Gary "PA Bear" wrote in message ... Installing MS06-076 (KB923964) would not have affected the behavior of Disk Cleanup, Gary. -- ~Robear Dyer (PA Bear) MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User) AumHa VSOP & Admin; DTS-L.org Gary Walker wrote: I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
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Cannot reproduce here.
Gary Walker wrote: Perhaps not, but that's when cleanup quit including the RB. It should be easy enough to simulate, give it a try. "PA Bear" wrote in message ... Installing MS06-076 (KB923964) would not have affected the behavior of Disk Cleanup, Gary. -- ~Robear Dyer (PA Bear) MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User) AumHa VSOP & Admin; DTS-L.org Gary Walker wrote: I have a one question, and a couple of comments con- cerning the fix that started that recycle bin "redundancy". As I recall, prior to my update some time ago, I had actually read about the update, and had to seek it out by name/number. Windows update had never offered that fix during any of my frequent update sessions. Additionally, I can only claim coincidence here, but sometime after that update my disk cleanup no longer would include recycle bin even though selected. The disk cleanup I'm describing is the Windows Explorer propertiesdisk cleanup procedure. Prior to that .bak update, the cleanup would empty the recycle bin. After the .bak update, the recycle bin is left intact. That's ok, though, as it kinda' makes sense because this could destroy the .bak retentions. Lastly, only as a point of curiosity, I've seen a few refer- ences from Bruce Hagen where he'll describe that a poster may/will be missing some important service. The way the comments are phrased, combined with the thread history, seems to indicate that the poster's header contains information that can be used to identify the OE service level. Have I misunderstood? Thanks, Gary "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... Go to Windows Updates. You are missing at least two that directly affect OE. This is why you don't have the BAK files in your Recycle Bin when you compact. Don't rely on Automatic Updates to download everything. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... msoe.dll 600 2900 2869 "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Open OE | Help | About. In the box, scroll down to msoe.dll and post the numbers you see there. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? Yes. As I said befo General precautions for Outlook Express: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. After you are done, follow up by compacting your folders manually while working *offline* and do it often. Click on Outlook Express at the top of the folder tree so no folders are open. Then: File | Work Offline (or double click Working Online in the Status Bar). File | Folder | Compact all folders. Don't touch anything until the compacting is completed. If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? You can set it to overwrite, or not. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your help. I'm getting there. I don't have the msoe.dll patch. How do I get it? I went into windows update and they can't find it by the number. Also,. I do not have a program that automatically cleans out the Recycle Bin. What do you mean by using my delete file as a garbage pail? Are you telling me top clean it out more often? If I use the OEQB, does it overwrite the info that I had in it previously? Thanks agin. You've been a big help. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Did you read the Help for OEQB? Did you create the requires folder? http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/oeqb.htm In OE | Help | About......., scroll down to msoe.dll. Are your numbers 600.2900.3028? If not, then you're not fully patched and won't find BAK folders. Do you have any program that automatically empties the Recycle Bin? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... Thanks for your advice. I assume I'm fully patched. I have my computer set to automatically update, yet I can't find BAK files in the Recycle Bin. Also, wshen I try to use OE Quick Backup, I keep getting a message "Please select a backup folder before proceding further." I'm embarassed to say I don't know how to do this. "Bruce Hagen" wrote: Why are you keeping messages in a garbage pail? (Deleted Items). Why does OE insist on compacting folders when I close it?: http://www.insideoe.com/faqs/why.htm#compact Compacting your folders periodically is a must to keep OE functioning well and at some point, you may lose all your saved messages if you don't. When you delete, or move messages, the space they had used remains until you compact. See: www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 With SP2, automatic background compacting was removed due to problems it caused. Now you will get a prompt to compact after 100 OE closings, which you should do, and don't touch anything until it has finished. See this for more information: http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm#compact If you are fully patched, you will also now see a copy of your dbx files being copied to the Recycle Bin as BAK files. Should something go awry when compacting, the messages can easily be restored from this backup. A manual compact will also reset the counter in the registry back to zero now. For more info, see the information outlined in red he www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#2 To keep things running smooth, and for faster compacting: Do not archive mail in default OE folders. They will eventually become corrupt and you may lose mail. Create your own user defined folders for storing mail and move your mail to them. Empty Deleted Items folder regularly. Keep user created folders under 100MB, and Default folders as empty as is feasible. And backup often. Backup and Resto http://www.insideoutlookexpress.com/backup/ http://www.oehelp.com/backup.aspx http://www.oehelp.com/OEBackup/Default.aspx -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "Bobm0001" wrote in message ... About every four or five times I follow the compact messages directions, I lose 1-6 months of messages in either the deleted or send file. Each time, I swear I'll never compact messages again, but OE wears me down by forcing me to reject the compacting. Can I retreive the lost messages? How do I backup the messages so I don't lose them permanently? |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Compact messages in OE | Philip | Outlook Express | 3 | February 6th 07 09:22 PM |
compact messages | Cynanthis | Outlook Express | 2 | October 4th 06 02:35 PM |
compact messages | shakey | Outlook Express | 11 | August 29th 06 10:55 AM |
OE still tries compact messages by surprise! | Michel Merlin | Outlook Express | 3 | June 15th 06 04:34 PM |
How do I stop 'Would u like to Compact' messages | mikey | Outlook Express | 20 | April 26th 06 11:35 AM |